- This topic has 105 replies, 15 voices, and was last updated 17 years, 1 month ago by drunkle.
-
AuthorPosts
-
November 20, 2007 at 7:54 PM #10962November 20, 2007 at 8:54 PM #102147JWM in SDParticipant
“With this type of cooperation from loan servicers, we can save tens of thousands of people from being added to the foreclosure lists.”
Ah yes, but they should on the foreclosure because they shouldn’t have been given a loan in the first place.
Gee, I wonder how the investors in the MBS’s that were sold by the participating lenders feel about that…they’re getting hosed on this.
November 20, 2007 at 8:54 PM #102226JWM in SDParticipant“With this type of cooperation from loan servicers, we can save tens of thousands of people from being added to the foreclosure lists.”
Ah yes, but they should on the foreclosure because they shouldn’t have been given a loan in the first place.
Gee, I wonder how the investors in the MBS’s that were sold by the participating lenders feel about that…they’re getting hosed on this.
November 20, 2007 at 8:54 PM #102235JWM in SDParticipant“With this type of cooperation from loan servicers, we can save tens of thousands of people from being added to the foreclosure lists.”
Ah yes, but they should on the foreclosure because they shouldn’t have been given a loan in the first place.
Gee, I wonder how the investors in the MBS’s that were sold by the participating lenders feel about that…they’re getting hosed on this.
November 20, 2007 at 8:54 PM #102259JWM in SDParticipant“With this type of cooperation from loan servicers, we can save tens of thousands of people from being added to the foreclosure lists.”
Ah yes, but they should on the foreclosure because they shouldn’t have been given a loan in the first place.
Gee, I wonder how the investors in the MBS’s that were sold by the participating lenders feel about that…they’re getting hosed on this.
November 20, 2007 at 8:54 PM #102287JWM in SDParticipant“With this type of cooperation from loan servicers, we can save tens of thousands of people from being added to the foreclosure lists.”
Ah yes, but they should on the foreclosure because they shouldn’t have been given a loan in the first place.
Gee, I wonder how the investors in the MBS’s that were sold by the participating lenders feel about that…they’re getting hosed on this.
November 20, 2007 at 9:42 PM #102168AnonymousGuestSuspect this will prove to be lip service, for the most part
November 20, 2007 at 9:42 PM #102245AnonymousGuestSuspect this will prove to be lip service, for the most part
November 20, 2007 at 9:42 PM #102256AnonymousGuestSuspect this will prove to be lip service, for the most part
November 20, 2007 at 9:42 PM #102279AnonymousGuestSuspect this will prove to be lip service, for the most part
November 20, 2007 at 9:42 PM #102307AnonymousGuestSuspect this will prove to be lip service, for the most part
November 20, 2007 at 9:49 PM #102178JWM in SDParticipantSorry, but this is really pissing me off and I have more to say about it.
Here is what Hank Paulson had to say today as well…”aggressively encouraging” the mortgage-service industry — which collects loan payments from borrowers — to develop criteria that would enable large groups of borrowers who might default on their payments to qualify for loans with better terms.”
Sound familiar? The problem with all of these assinine suggestions is that the problem is not with the terms. It’s the PRINCIPAL!!!!! Prices paid were beyond the ability of the borrowers to service the debt they incurred. Any workout of the debt structure in a loan that actually amortizes the principal cannot be afforded by the borrower in question in many cases. Ah yes, amortization schedules, anyone remember those? Hell, I used to build those for fun back in the day. Try asking for one now and watch the look on the brokers face.
November 20, 2007 at 9:49 PM #102255JWM in SDParticipantSorry, but this is really pissing me off and I have more to say about it.
Here is what Hank Paulson had to say today as well…”aggressively encouraging” the mortgage-service industry — which collects loan payments from borrowers — to develop criteria that would enable large groups of borrowers who might default on their payments to qualify for loans with better terms.”
Sound familiar? The problem with all of these assinine suggestions is that the problem is not with the terms. It’s the PRINCIPAL!!!!! Prices paid were beyond the ability of the borrowers to service the debt they incurred. Any workout of the debt structure in a loan that actually amortizes the principal cannot be afforded by the borrower in question in many cases. Ah yes, amortization schedules, anyone remember those? Hell, I used to build those for fun back in the day. Try asking for one now and watch the look on the brokers face.
November 20, 2007 at 9:49 PM #102266JWM in SDParticipantSorry, but this is really pissing me off and I have more to say about it.
Here is what Hank Paulson had to say today as well…”aggressively encouraging” the mortgage-service industry — which collects loan payments from borrowers — to develop criteria that would enable large groups of borrowers who might default on their payments to qualify for loans with better terms.”
Sound familiar? The problem with all of these assinine suggestions is that the problem is not with the terms. It’s the PRINCIPAL!!!!! Prices paid were beyond the ability of the borrowers to service the debt they incurred. Any workout of the debt structure in a loan that actually amortizes the principal cannot be afforded by the borrower in question in many cases. Ah yes, amortization schedules, anyone remember those? Hell, I used to build those for fun back in the day. Try asking for one now and watch the look on the brokers face.
November 20, 2007 at 9:49 PM #102289JWM in SDParticipantSorry, but this is really pissing me off and I have more to say about it.
Here is what Hank Paulson had to say today as well…”aggressively encouraging” the mortgage-service industry — which collects loan payments from borrowers — to develop criteria that would enable large groups of borrowers who might default on their payments to qualify for loans with better terms.”
Sound familiar? The problem with all of these assinine suggestions is that the problem is not with the terms. It’s the PRINCIPAL!!!!! Prices paid were beyond the ability of the borrowers to service the debt they incurred. Any workout of the debt structure in a loan that actually amortizes the principal cannot be afforded by the borrower in question in many cases. Ah yes, amortization schedules, anyone remember those? Hell, I used to build those for fun back in the day. Try asking for one now and watch the look on the brokers face.
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.